Mayo Clinic-Cardinal Health GLN White Paper v1.1

Transcription

Mayo Clinic-Cardinal Health GLN White Paper v1.1
Mayo Clinic/Cardinal Health
GLN Implementation
WHITE PAPER
Version 1.1
Published: May 2009
Revised: February 2010
Authored by: Kenneth D. Pelletier
Business Coordinator - Data Integrity
Supply Chain Management, Mayo Clinic
Improving Patient Safety and Supply Chain Efficiency with GS1 Standards
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ......................................................................................................................................... 3
INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................................................... 4
THE CHALLENGE .................................................................................................................................................... 6
THE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY .......................................................................................................................... 6
INNOVATION IMPLEMENTATION .................................................................................................................. 6
GS1 STANDARDS AND SOLUTIONS USED ................................................................................................................ 7
CREATING THE GLN HIERARCHY ........................................................................................................................... 7
SUPPLY CHAIN PARTNERS SELECTED ...................................................................................................................... 8
PLANNING INNOVATION, BUILDING CONSENSUS .................................................................................................. 8
GLN PROJECT TEAM ................................................................................................................................................ 9
PROJECT PLAN STEP-BY-STEP .......................................................................................................................... 10
PHASE 1: PRE-IMPLEMENTATION .......................................................................................................................... 10
PHASES 2 THROUGH 5 ............................................................................................................................................ 11
ORGANIZATIONAL READINESS .............................................................................................................................. 12
PROJECT COSTS .................................................................................................................................................... 12
IMPLEMENTATION RESULTS........................................................................................................................... 13
IMPLEMENTATION BENEFITS ......................................................................................................................... 13
LESSONS LEARNED ............................................................................................................................................. 13
LOCATION RECONCILIATION ................................................................................................................................. 13
EDI TRANSACTIONS ............................................................................................................................................... 14
CARDINAL HEALTH SYSTEM .................................................................................................................................. 14
MAYO CLINIC DATABASE ...................................................................................................................................... 14
GHX SYSTEM .......................................................................................................................................................... 14
NEXT STEPS............................................................................................................................................................. 14
CONCLUSION......................................................................................................................................................... 15
ABOUT MAYO CLINIC......................................................................................................................................... 16
ABOUT CARDINAL HEALTH............................................................................................................................. 16
ABOUT NOVATION.............................................................................................................................................. 16
ABOUT GHX ............................................................................................................................................................ 17
ABOUT LAWSON................................................................................................................................................... 17
ABOUT MEDITECH ............................................................................................................................................... 17
APPENDIX A: GLOSSARY OF TERMS ............................................................................................................. 18
APPENDIX B: MAYO CLINIC / CARDINAL HEALTH GLN LAWSON PROJECT PLAN ..................... 20
APPENDIX C: MAYO CLINIC / CARDINAL HEALTH GLN MEDITECH PROJECT PLAN ................. 21
APPENDIX D: MEDITECH GLN PROJECT TEAM ......................................................................................... 24
APPENDIX E: ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING PRESENTATION ........................................................... 25
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APPENDIX F: MAYO CLINIC 850 PURCHASE ORDER MAP ..................................................................... 28
APPENDIX G: MAYO CLINIC 850 EDI USING THE ‘UL’ IDENTIFIER .................................................... 29
APPENDIX H: MAYO CLINIC CONFIGURATION OF MEDITECH FOR CARDINAL HEALTH.......30
APPENDIX I: MAYO CLINIC ANNOUNCEMENT TO SUPPLIERS ........................................................... 31
APPENDIX J: RESOURCE LINKS ....................................................................................................................... 32
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Utilizing the GS1 Global Location Number (GLN), Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health have
implemented standardized identifiers for accounts/locations as the essential first step in their
effort to fully support the adoption of healthcare supply chain standards. During this
collaborative project, both parties discovered that the GLN could be implemented swiftly and
easily - requiring only weeks, as opposed to months or years. This white paper outlines the
GLN implementation process used by Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health, and identifies the
lessons learned and the results achieved so that others may learn how to implement the GLN in
their operations and realize similar success.
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INTRODUCTION
Poor data impacts many areas in the healthcare supply chain. Most importantly, poor data
impacts patient safety when the supply chain fails to deliver the right medical product, to the
right patient, at the right time. As a result, supply chain data standards are currently a major
topic for the healthcare industry. In fact, standards adoption is now considered a requirement
for effectively controlling both cost and quality in healthcare going forward.
In the past, there have been numerous discussions in healthcare with regard to the value of
standards and which standards to use. Today, the discussion has shifted to how to implement
standards, the first steps to take and timing. Industry groups like the Association for
Healthcare Resource & Materials Management (AHRMM), Health Industry Group Purchasing
Association (HIGPA), Healthcare Supply Chain Standards Coalition (HSCSC), and Strategic
Marketplace Initiative (SMI), as well as various integrated delivery networks (IDNs), group
purchasing organizations (GPOs), and suppliers, have all endorsed GS1 standards. In addition,
many of the healthcare industry’s supply chain partners, including Mayo Clinic, have
voluntarily established the end of 2010 as the date by which they will adopt GS1 Global
Location Numbers (GLNs) to replace custom account numbers in order to reduce costs and
improve patient safety. This adoption target is known as the “2010 GLN Sunrise.”
See Appendix J for a link to a detailed description of the 2010 GLN Sunrise.
Industry-wide implementation of data standards such as the GS1 System can improve supply
chain data integrity. The GS1 System enables global and unique identification of products and
locations, as well as the continuous, automatic update (i.e., synchronizing) of standardized
product information across all supply chain partners. These standards provide the necessary
foundation for achieving the best results when using complementary applications like
automatic data capture, e-commerce, electronic record management, assets and equipment
tracking, and traceability.
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To illustrate this, Figure 1 below shows standardized product identifiers (GS1 Global Trade
Item Numbers, or GTINs), standardized location identifiers (GLNs), and the Global Data
Synchronization Network® (GDSN®) as the foundation of the “house” in building patient
safety and an efficient supply chain. The pillars in the house represent the healthcare
applications necessary to achieve patient safety and supply chain efficiency. The standards
provide the interoperability required to support those applications and make all of it happen.
“Building Patient Safety”
Mayo Clinic and Cardinal
Health began their
implementation with the
GLN, a foundational GS1
standard.
Copyright 2010 GS1 US
Figure 1. Building Patient Safety with GS1 Standards
Mayo Clinic firmly believes that supply chain data standards will greatly improve healthcare
safety and efficiency, supporting their primary value that “the needs of patients come first.” In
July 2008, Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health collaborated to implement the GS1 GLN as their
sole account/location identifier for Mayo Clinic Foundation’s Lawson MMIS system. In
October 2009, both groups implemented a second instance using Meditech for the Mayo Clinic
Health Systems. The smaller, autonomous Mayo Clinic Health Systems use Meditech, while the
larger, non-autonomous Mayo Clinic Foundation uses Lawson. Mayo Clinic and Cardinal
Health agreed that these GLN projects would be an innovative first step toward the 2010 GLN
Sunrise.
This white paper was developed to document the process used by Mayo Clinic and Cardinal
Health to implement GLNs in their organizations. It is intended to serve as a guide to help
other providers and suppliers to rapidly implement and immediately realize the benefits that
the GLN can bring to the healthcare industry. To that end, this paper explains the steps taken to
implement this foundational GS1 standard, as well as the lessons learned and the results
achieved at Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health.
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THE CHALLENGE
Prior to this project, Mayo Clinic’s account and location numbers were not standardized across
their supply chain partners. Instead, each Mayo Clinic location that was associated with a
supplier had its own custom account number specific to that supplier. This required Mayo
Clinic to manage the numerous individual account numbers assigned by their many vendors,
which required significant resources and increased the likelihood for errors. As a result, this
practice created an administrative burden and resulted in unnecessary expense.
Figure 2. Multiple account
numbers for the same locations
To illustrate this point, Figure 2 shows the Mayo Clinic
account/location numbers used by various vendors. Mayo
Clinic Location 1, for example, is identified as Location#
111111 by Vendor 1, but as Location# 21111 by Vendor 2 demonstrating how the same location can have numerous
identification numbers. This approach fosters inaccuracy
and inefficiency. Instead, each location should have one
standard number (i.e., the GLN). Think of it as a mailing
address: an identifier for a single location in the world that is
globally unique to that location. No other organization,
agency, or affiliate can use it to identify their locations, but
all parties can and should use it to identify that location.
THE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Each GLN identifier is a unique, 13-digit number for a specific location. Implementing GLN
enabled Mayo Clinic to replace the numerous custom account numbers for each location with
one unique number (GLN) for each location. This simplified the exchange of supply chain
information and provided Mayo Clinic with the opportunity to manage orders, vendor
payments and rebates more effectively. Common location identifiers allow consistent data
sharing with the GDSN, purchase orders, GPO rosters, and contracts.
INNOVATION IMPLEMENTATION
While implementation is not a daunting task, it can seem like it at the start. Listed below are
some of the resources available to help guide providers and suppliers through the process:
(1) GS1 US Minnesota Pilot Project (2006-2007): This pilot was conducted to develop GLN
healthcare processes, setup and coordination. The final pilot report documents the
findings, suggestions and lessons learned. The findings from the Minnesota Pilot helped
guide Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health’s GLN implementation. The final reports
developed by the Minnesota pilot team should be reviewed prior to initiating a 2010
GLN Sunrise program.
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(2) GLN Healthcare Provider and Supplier Tool Kits: How-to guides developed by the
industry for implementing GLNs.
(3) GS1 Healthcare US Website: Provides tools and resources to guide an organization
through GLN implementation. Contact information for GS1 US staff experts is also
available.
(4) Moving to Global Location Numbers (GLNs): Considerations for Healthcare Trading
Partners: A GHX educational paper discussing issues that healthcare supply chain
partners need to consider as they transition from using multiple account numbers (for
the same locations) to using GLNs.
(5) Information documented within this white paper.
See Appendix J for links to these resources.
GS1 Standards and Solutions Used
 GS1 Global Location Number (GLN)
 GS1 US GLN Registry for Healthcare®
Creating the GLN Hierarchy
Setting the scope of the effort required a focus on Mayo Clinic’s internal processes. The
hierarchy of an organization’s locations can vary considerably, even with the same number of
beds and the same mission in the same city. Business considerations of the parent organization
and the business model [i.e., just-in-time (JIT) or central delivery] can affect the number of
GLNs required for an individual organization. The GLN hierarchy that Mayo Clinic defined is
shown below:
Level 1 - Enterprise (corporate legal entity):
 Top Level of the Organization
Level 2 - Entity:
 Logical Grouping of Locations for Contracting, Pricing and Spend Aggregation
 Usually Geographically Designated
Level 3 - Location:
 Primarily the Receiving Location
 Mostly Ship-to Locations
Level 4 - Location:
 Primarily Reserved for Future Coding of the Deliver-to Location
 Also Used for Special Handling (within a Receiving Location)
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Mayo Clinic, like other providers, was initially assigned GLNs in the GLN Registry for
Healthcare® by their GPO (in this case, Novation). Once registered, no other GS1-compliant
organization will have the same GLNs. After the GLNs were assigned to Mayo Clinic, Mayo
Clinic assumed ownership of their GLNs and hierarchy from their GPO in order to have handson management control of GLN alignment within their day-to-day operations and business
strategy. A portion of the Mayo Clinic’s hierarchy as listed in the GLN Registry is shown in
Figure 3.
Figure 3. Mayo Clinic hierarchy as shown in the GLN Registry
Supply Chain Partners Selected
To limit project scope, Mayo Clinic worked with a single distributor, Cardinal Health, and with
their mutual electronic business-to-business exchange partner, Global Healthcare Exchange
(GHX).
Planning Innovation, Building Consensus
While use of GLNs in retail and the grocery industry is common, the use of GLNs in healthcare
is just beginning. In initial meetings, Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health learned that they had
similar GLN adoption aspirations: they both wanted to be early adopters of standards. Mayo
Clinic was the first hospital to approach Cardinal Health about transacting supply orders using
GLNs.
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Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health held joint meetings to determine the scope of and the
expectations for the project to transact with GLNs. After examination of their business
processes, they both agreed that GLNs would work well. Once this step was completed, both
parties made a commitment to move forward.
Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health realized that using the GLN as a standard location identifier
was something that would benefit each organization, as well as the healthcare industry. Each
organization had the designated resources, capacity, and business logic to make the GLN work,
and both recognized that in order for the project to succeed, they would need to work
collaboratively. It was decided that each group would create their own internal project plans
which would be combined later. At this point, it was time to identify team members and
delegate responsibilities.
GLN Project Team
The GLN team included members from both Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health. The selected
team members were accountable to the Project Sponsors from each respective partner. A Project
Lead was required from each organization to manage the project plans and oversee the team
activities. Similarly, each partner required Implementation Analysts to understand the
requirements and to configure the systems and processes. A Functional Lead and an eBusiness
Lead were required at Cardinal Health to ensure changes to systems and processes did not
inhibit current operations. A Mayo Clinic Technical Specialist and Cardinal Health EDI Mapping
Specialist were also required to implement changes to the EDI code. The makeup of the team for
the Mayo Foundation / Cardinal Health implementation is shown below.
Team Member
Company
Role
Bill Zimmerman
Joe Dudas
Tom Krueger
Rita Sinclair
Jill Fliehman
Debbie Petersen
Bryan Allen
Theresa Franckowiak
Ken Pelletier
Russ Mullins
Ross Hamernik
Cardinal Health
Mayo Clinic
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Sponsor
Sponsor
Project Lead
eBusiness Lead
Functional Lead
Implementation Analyst
Implementation Analyst
EDI Mapping
Project Lead
Implementation Analyst
IT Technical Specialist
Figure 4. Mayo Clinic / Cardinal Health “Lawson Implementation” Team Members
See Appendix D for the Meditech GLN Implementation Team Members.
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In addition to daily communication through email and phone conversations, the team met
weekly to discuss issues, questions and items completed. It was essential that both partners
maintained total transparency regarding the project status, timelines and capabilities.
PROJECT PLAN STEP-BY-STEP
The project was broken up into several phases:
 Phase 1: Pre-Implementation (Planning and Mapping)
 Phase 2: Cardinal Health Base System (Standard Order Processing)
 Phase 3: Cardinal Health JIT System (Value Added Processing)
 Phase 4: New ERP Locations (because Mayo Clinic had an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP)
implementation project running simultaneously)
 Phase 5: Wrap-Up (Resolve Lower Priority Issues)
Phase 1: Pre-Implementation
The Pre-Implementation Phase of the project was straightforward and sequential:
(1) Mayo Clinic created a cross-reference worksheet to map the Cardinal Health account
numbers to GLNs.
(2) Cardinal Health reviewed the mapping for account accuracy.
(3) GHX sent Mayo Clinic a list of the Ship-to locations for Mayo Clinic that were already in
the GHX system, and Mayo Clinic returned a validated list of the specific Ship-to
locations and their associated GLNs that needed to be added to the GHX system (known
as a “boarding request”). *
(4) GHX sent the boarding request to Cardinal Health to update their system with the new
GLN numbers as well.
(5) Cardinal Health set up their system to transact with both the GLN and original account
number, enabling each company to test GLNs while still transacting with current account
numbers.
* NOTE: GHX had to modify their system mapping to transact with GLNs. It is
highly recommended to work with your company’s electronic business-tobusiness exchange partner from the beginning of a GLN conversion.
See Appendices B and C for the project plans for the Lawson and Meditech Implementations.
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Phases 2 through 5
During each subsequent phase of the project, Mayo Clinic first transacted in their
test/development environment, and then repeated the test in their production environment.
The steps performed in each of those environments are detailed below.
Mayo Clinic Test Environment Steps:
(1) Mayo Clinic’s test system was used to create test EDI 850 Purchase Orders using the GLN
Ship-to locations. Mayo Clinic processed these orders and passed the transactions to
GHX.
(2) GHX processed the 850 Purchase Order transactions and forwarded them to Cardinal
Health.
(3) Cardinal Health processed these orders and created the 855 Purchase Order
Acknowledgment, 856 Advance Shipping Notice and 810 Invoice transactions - all of
which were then passed to GHX.
(4) GHX processed the 855, 856 and 810 transactions, and then passed them to Mayo Clinic.*
(5) Throughout the entire testing process, the joint GLN team monitored every step. Once
each side was comfortable with the Mayo Clinic test results, the process moved to
production.
* NOTE: While Mayo Clinic did not use the GLN on any Mayo Clinic inbound transactions (i.e., 855
Purchase Order Acknowledgments, 810 EDI Invoices, and 856 Ship Notices), the team felt it important to
test inbound transactions for future use.
Production Environment Steps:
(1) Initially, test 850 Purchase Orders were sent to Cardinal Health from Mayo Clinic.
(2) For three days, each order was monitored for errors and corrections.
(3) Once the GLN team was comfortable with the standards-based solution, all Mayo Clinicto-Cardinal Health orders were transacted using only GLNs.
It is important to note that Cardinal Health Base and Cardinal Health JIT systems were done
sequentially.
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Organizational Readiness
Internal training is necessary for buyers and customer support to have a successful
implementation. It is necessary for end users to understand the changes so that they are able to
transact via phone and fax if needed. Training was conducted with the Mayo Clinic
procurement staff and a Cardinal Health sales representative.
See Appendix E for a copy of this training presentation.
PROJECT COSTS
Resourcing was the only significant cost for the project. It was estimated that 2.5 Full Time
Equivalents (FTEs) would be required over a period of six months. During execution of the
project, actual FTEs needed were less than estimated. No incremental budget requests were
made to staff the project or to make the minor system changes needed. Figure 5 shows the
resource allocation breakdown for the six month period for the Mayo Clinic GLN
implementation.
Company
Roles
FTE
Cardinal Health
Project Sponsor
Project Lead
Functional Lead
Implementation Analyst(s)
EDI Mapping
0.1
0.25
0.25
0.5
0.1
Cardinal Health Total
1.2
Project Sponsor
Project Lead
Implementation Analyst
Programmer
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic Total
0.1
0.5
0.25
0.25
1.1
Figure 5. Resource allocation breakdown
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IMPLEMENTATION RESULTS
 Mayo Clinic converted 58 custom account numbers to GLNs in the following Mayo Clinic
Health System facilities:
Mayo Foundation
Austin
Red Cedar
Albert Lea
Fairmont
ISJ
Lake City
48 GLNs
1 GLN
1 GLN
1 GLN
1 GLN
4 GLNs
2 GLNs
 Mayo Clinic was able to convert approximately 50,000 order lines to the GLN in February
2009 as a result of the Lawson implementation.
 Mayo Clinic was able to convert approximately 60,000 order lines to the GLN in November
2009 – which accounted for 85.6% of total EDI orders for November 2009 as a result of the
Lawson and Meditech implementations.
 In 2009, $70M dollars of product was transacted between Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health
using the GLN.
IMPLEMENTATION BENEFITS
Price accuracy improves with location identification accuracy. Location identification errors can
cause loss of discount eligibility as well as tier qualification and rebate disputes.
 Mayo Clinic / Cardinal Health price accuracy is currently 99.5%. All other suppliers
average 95% accuracy. Superior price accuracy is attributed to not only GLN, but also to
the commitment that both organizations make to price integrity and associated
improvement efforts.
LESSONS LEARNED
During the project, the GLN team worked through several challenges:
Location Reconciliation
Mayo Clinic had a warehouse with several receiving locations because certain inventory could
not be mixed (e.g., flammables and non-flammables). Routing to distinct warehouse locations
and use of distinct shipping labels were required. While originally there was only one GLN
assigned to that warehouse, Mayo Clinic had to go back and create four new Level 4 GLNs for
the four distinct locations within that warehouse.
NOTE: These are the only Level 4 locations currently configured for Mayo Clinic. In the future, Mayo
Clinic may choose to standardize Deliver-to locations and utilize reserved Level 4 for this purpose.
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EDI Transactions
The EDI 850, 810, 855, and 856 transaction set needed to use a specific qualifier code for GLN in
its mapping process. Specifically, the outbound mapping N1 segment (Ship-to information)
needed to be changed from 91 to UL. (UL is the ANSI standard for a GLN when used as a Shipto.) Otherwise, the updates needed were typical of EDI implementations.
See Appendix F for Mayo Clinic’s 850 Purchase Order Map and
Appendix G for Mayo Clinic’s 850 EDI using the “UL” identifier.
The Meditech system was easily configured for Cardinal Health to accommodate the use of the
GLN.
See Appendix H for the Meditech configuration.
Cardinal Health System
The Cardinal Health Base system had the functionality for a generic location identifier.
However, the JIT system had to be modified to accept a 13-digit GLN.
Mayo Clinic Database
Mayo Clinic’s custom account database could only hold 12 characters. The global standard for
GLN is 13 digits. Mayo Clinic had to change this field length to accommodate 13 digits.
GHX System
GHX found for their subscribers that the most effective way to reconcile a provider’s EDI Ship-to
locations was to send the provider an export of what GHX had on file for that provider and to
have the provider validate the locations and notify GHX of any changes. This was determined
to be preferable to the original approach whereby the provider would send GHX Ship-to
location information via a SuperSAW document, which did not ensure reconciliation.
NEXT STEPS
Mayo Clinic has stated that the GLN will be required by all suppliers by the end of 2010. Mayo
Clinic’s sourcing plan includes transacting with its healthcare suppliers using GLN location
identifiers exclusively.
See Appendix I for Mayo Clinic’s Announcement to Suppliers.
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CONCLUSION
Mayo Clinic and Cardinal Health are among the first organizations in healthcare to implement
GLNs in supply chain transactions. They successfully implemented GLNs in a large location
using Lawson and in autonomous locations using Meditech. The use of GLNs improves supply
chain management performance, and GLNs used in conjunction with other GS1 standards
promise even greater performance. Similarly, the more supply chain partners that adopt GS1
standards, the greater the benefits for the entire industry.
A strong project plan with a dedicated team made this implementation successful. It is
necessary to educate the team, and get their feedback and agreement for the tasks that need to
get done. It is also necessary to conduct joint team meetings where all team members attend
and communicate with everyone within the project. And finally, everything should be tested.
With the 2010 GLN Sunrise date quickly approaching, it is highly recommended that healthcare
supply chain partners use the resources within this white paper and those available from GS1
Healthcare US to begin implementing GLNs. It is the opinion of the author that the GLN was
easy to implement and that there is an abundance of willing partners. In conclusion, the GLN
implementation was straightforward, technologically feasible, and seamless for operations to
implement.
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ABOUT MAYO CLINIC
“Mayo Clinic is a not-for-profit medical practice dedicated to the diagnosis and treatment of
virtually every type of complex illness. The needs of the patient come first. [A patient] will see
as many doctors, specialists and other health care professionals as needed to provide
comprehensive diagnosis, understandable answers and effective treatment.”
ABOUT CARDINAL HEALTH
“Headquartered in Dublin, Ohio, Cardinal Health, Inc. (NYSE: CAH) is a Fortune 18 health care
services company that improves the cost-effectiveness of health care. As the business behind
health care, Cardinal Health helps pharmacies, hospitals and ambulatory care sites focus on
patient care while reducing costs, improving efficiency and quality, and increasing profitability.
As one of the largest health care companies in the world, Cardinal Health is an essential link in
the health care supply chain, providing pharmaceuticals and medical products to more than
40,000 locations each day. The company is also a leading manufacturer of medical and surgical
products, including gloves, surgical apparel and fluid management products. In addition, the
company supports the growing diagnostic industry by supplying medical products to clinical
laboratories and operating the nation’s largest network of radiopharmacies that dispense
products to aid in the early diagnosis and treatment of disease. Cardinal Health employs more
than 30,000 people worldwide. More information about the company may be found at
www.cardinalhealth.com.”
ABOUT NOVATION
"Novation was established Jan. 1, 1998, when VHA Inc. and University HealthSystem
Consortium (UHC), two national health care alliances, consolidated their supply-contracting
functions. Based in Irving, Texas, Novation acts as the supply contracting company for nearly
25,000 VHA and UHC member organizations to help them manage and reduce supply costs.
The health care markets served by Novation include acute hospitals and systems, academic
medical centers, ambulatory care and physician clinics, home health and long-term care
facilities.
Novation also provides supply contracting services to thousands of health care, education,
municipalities and corporate members of Provista, a supply chain improvement company
jointly owned by VHA and UHC, to serve health care organizations that are not members of
either alliance, as well as non-health care markets. More information about the company may
be found at www.novationco.com."
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ABOUT GHX
“A pioneer in the early business-to-business exchange market, GHX’s original focus was
building an electronic trading exchange where suppliers and providers could use a single
connection to do business with multiple trading partners. It has survived and thrived by
staying true to its core focus: making healthcare more efficient.
GHX has become a collaborative community connected through a robust, reliable and scalable
infrastructure where providers and suppliers can conduct business with one another
electronically. Today, GHX delivers customers a wide range of offerings that drive better
efficiency, reduce costs and improve operational performance through:
 supply chain, accounts payable and sales force automation
 content, contract and inventory management
 business intelligence
More information about the company may be found at www.ghx.com.”
ABOUT LAWSON
"Lawson provides business application software and services that help healthcare organizations
save time and reduce costs by managing three key operational resources: people, supplies and
financial assets. Lawson solutions provide a solid operational foundation, so providers can
focus on their mission – providing quality patient care. For more information, visit
www.lawson.com/healthcare."
ABOUT MEDITECH
“A leading software vendor in the health care informatics industry for 40 years, MEDITECH
provides integrated software solutions that meet the information needs of health care
organizations worldwide. The organizations we serve include hospitals, ambulatory care
centers, physicians' offices, long term care and behavioral health facilities, and home health
organizations.”
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APPENDIX A: GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Boarding Request: The process of adding locations with GHX.
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI): The computer-to-computer exchange of structured
information, by agreed message standards, from one computer application to another by
electronic means and with a minimum of human intervention. This includes business
transactions, such as orders, confirmations and invoices, between organizations.
Global Data Synchronization Network® (GDSN®): The GS1 Global Registry and a network of
interoperable, certified Data Pools that enable data synchronization per GS1 System standards.
Global Location Number (GLN): The globally unique GS1 identification number for legal
entities, functional entities and physical locations. The Global Location Number is 13 digits,
comprised of a GS1 Company Prefix, a Location Reference and a Check Digit. The associated
name, address, and class of trade are “tied” to each unique number, and each GLN is specific to
only one exact and very precise location within the world.
GLN Healthcare Provider & Supplier Tool Kits: The Global Location Number (GLN)
Healthcare Provider and Supplier Tool Kits are how-to guides for implementing GLNs for
standardized party and location identification. These guides are available free online from GS1
Healthcare US. (See Appendix J for a link to each tool kit.)
GLN Registry for Healthcare®: A comprehensive and accurate registry of healthcare facilities
and suppliers in the United States, with corresponding GLNs. The Registry keeps track of
organizational hierarchy information such as name, address, and class of trade.
GS1®: GS1 is a leading global organization dedicated to the design and implementation of
standards and solutions to improve the efficiency and visibility of supply and demand chains,
both globally and across sectors. GS1 is a fully integrated global organization, with 108 Member
Organizations (like GS1 US™) serving over a million companies doing business across 150
countries. Together, GS1 and its subsidiaries and partnerships connect companies with
standards-based solutions that are open, consensus-based and universally endorsed.
GS1 Healthcare US™: GS1 Healthcare US is an industry group that focuses on driving the
adoption and implementation of GS1 standards in the healthcare industry in the United States
to improve patient safety and supply chain efficiency. GS1 Healthcare US brings together
members from all segments of the healthcare industry to address the supply chain issues that
most impact healthcare in the United States. Facilitated by GS1 US, GS1 Healthcare US is one of
more than a dozen local GS1 Healthcare user groups around the world that supports the
adoption and implementation of global standards developed by GS1.
GS1 System: The specifications, standards, and guidelines administered by GS1. Through the
Global Standards Management Process (GSMP), GS1 manages the GS1 System to maintain the
most implemented standards in the world.
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GS1 US™: GS1 US is the Member Organization of GS1 that serves companies in the United
States. As such, it is the national implementation organization of the GS1 System dedicated to
the adoption and implementation of standards-based, global supply chain solutions in the
United States. GS1 US currently serves over 200,000 U.S. member companies -- 16,000 of which
are in healthcare.
Global Trade Item Number® (GTIN®): Globally unique GS1 identification number used to
identify trade items, which includes both products and services that are sold, delivered, and
invoiced at any point in the supply chain.
Just-In-Time (JIT): Stock-control system in which goods are produced and delivered as they are
required. It is designed to eliminate waste and avoid the need for large inventories.
SuperSAW: SuperSAW is a GHX registration worksheet that helps ensure provider boardings
and implementations are accurate. The customer will use the SuperSAW to detail where they
currently get shipments, account numbers for those locations, and how those shipments are to
be billed. The SuperSAW enables the user to select vendors and transaction sets they would like
to use with each vendor.
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APPENDIX B: MAYO CLINIC / CARDINAL HEALTH GLN LAWSON
PROJECT PLAN
NOTE: Lawson Version 9.0.0.7.199 used for this implementation.
*NOTE: MCR stands for Mayo Clinic Rochester. LA stands for La Crosse. MCF stands for Mayo
Clinic Florida. MCA stands for Mayo Clinic Arizona. EU stands for Eau Claire. YM05 is the
transaction mechanism to launch EDI orders. SYSINT2 is Mayo Clinic’s Test System.
20
APPENDIX C: MAYO CLINIC / CARDINAL HEALTH GLN MEDITECH
PROJECT PLAN
NOTE: Meditech Version 5.63 used for this implementation.
Scope
Enable the Meditech MMIS System to be able to generate an EDI 850 with the appropriate GLN within the transaction.
Starting with Cardinal Health and with potential for other distributors.
Executive Champions
Roles
Project Manager will provide project management with assistance from IT.
Project Manager responsibility is to keep the implementation on-track.
IT role will be to assist Project Manager with the MHS stakeholders’ information and communication needs.
Project Sponsor has identified the rest of the stakeholders involved in this project and secured the technical and operational
resources needed.
Steps
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Tasks
Identify Participants
Executive champion
Announcement to Mayo staff
Kick off meeting with Project Sponsor
Validate and Reconcile Locations
Secure resources
Meditech Instances and Resources
Project Manager to send emails
Confirm resources & get commitment
Operational Resources
GHX Resource
Additional logins as needed
Regular team meeting call
Responsible
Estimated
Actual
Estimated
Actual
Project Sponsor
Project Manager
Provider staff
Provider staff
Process: DESIGN
Steps
8
9
10
11
12
Tasks
Team kick off - account/GLN Reconciliation
Mayo Health Systems identifies applicable GLN values and
provides crosswalk to Cardinal Health cross referencing GLN to
ship to accounts
Cardinal Health reviews data and asks questions
Finish GLN Enumeration at Mayo Health System facilities
Reconcile GLN Registry with Cardinal Health - all sites
13
Finish Roster by defining Ship-to addresses with VHA
14
VHA and Mayo Pre transaction assessment
Responsible
Provider staff
Cardinal Health
Master Data Management
Provider, Cardinal Health,
Transaction Mechanism
(GHX)
Master Data Management/
GPO
Master Data Management/
GPO
21
Steps
15
Tasks
Small mapping change - 2 char field indicating that is a GLN
Responsible
Estimated
Actual
Have we identified the IT resource
16
Does that facility use an 810, 856
17
Cardinal Health Value Link or Cardinal Health Account #
18
Different GLN if value link vs. account #
19
Add manual processes - call in - customer service
20
Training for users - (could be same person)
Process: TESTING
21
25
Request is sent to GHX for the account addition to be added to
the SuperSAW Document
GHX to craft a no charge Scope of Work outlining the services
to be delivered to accommodate the Meditech facilities. Draft
to follow by end of week
Mayo team to provide contact person and information so that
GHX can gain clarity around Meditech’s ability to hold and
communicate GLN information in the same manner that
Lawson does. GHX will also investigate readiness of the
Connect plus servers to accommodate the service at these
sites.
GHX and Mayo team to change the GHX electronic ID (i.e.,
the GHX account number) hierarchy to match the GLN
Registry so that set ups for supplier 2-n become less work for
all involved.
GHX loads values on servers and verifies with Cardinal Health
26
Cardinal Health reviews data and asks questions
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
27
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
32
Cardinal Health verifies ANSI code to accept ANSI standard
associates with GLN values
Mayo Health System E-commerce Support communicates
GLN add to Cardinal Health EDI contact. Cardinal Health EDI
contact is responsible for verification that new value is loaded
into their systems
Once the GLN is verified by GHX and Cardinal Health, value
is added to the testing system
Mayo Health Systems creates test orders in Meditech and
transmits them through GHX (test 850)
Cardinal Health processes orders and passes back the test
855 to GHX
Test 855 is loaded in GHX
33
Test 855 is passed back to Mayo Health Systems
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
34
Acknowledgement report is generated from the test 855 to
verify that order is processed correctly
Mayo Health System communicates the testing and the plan to
move forward
Development of Supplier Communications
Mayo IT
22
23
24
28
29
30
31
35
36
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
IT/ Transaction Mechanism
(GHX)
Mayo IT
Mayo IT
Transaction Mechanism (GHX)
Mayo
22
Process: LIVE
Steps
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
Tasks
Mayo Health System updates GLN values in production
Mayo Health System verifies that Cardinal Health is setup for
EDI issue method in production
Mayo Health System notifies buyers, GHX and EDI
coordinators that we are going live
Mayo Health System creates order in Meditech and transmits
through GHX via EDI (Production 850)
Cardinal Health processes orders and passes back the
Production 855 to GHX
Production 855 is loaded in GHX
Production 855 is passed to Mayo Health Systems via EDI
inbound process
Acknowledgement report is generated from the production 855
to verify PO accuracy
Mayo Health System monitors for 3 business days via
Meditech, GHX and Cardinal Health website if available and
communicates issues to Mayo Health System
Mayo Health Systems 810 are passed by Cardinal Health and
are monitored by GHX MyExchange web portal and Meditech
Mayo Health System communicates with buyer’s and Cardinal
Health’s that implementation has been completed
GLN EDI capability within Meditech complete
UL Mapping Change
Responsible
Estimated
Actual
Mayo IT
Mayo IT
Mayo IT
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
GHX
GHX
Mayo
Mayo
Mayo
23
APPENDIX D: MEDITECH GLN PROJECT TEAM
Team Member
Company
Title
Bill Zimmerman
Joe Dudas
Tom Krueger
Rita Sinclair
Jill Fliehman
Debbie Petersen
Bryan Allen
Theresa Franckowiak
London Johnson
Ali Brown
Paul Cronin
Kim Tucker
Josh Skiba
Jonathan Fitch
Karen Wolfe
Charles Parsons
Russ Mullins
Chris Dixon
Mark Rofshus
Scott Wickman
Ken Pelletier
Ross Hamernik
Mary Bauer
Sabrina Ryan
Brandy Erickson
Jill Knaack
Robin Schwemmler
Sue Whitman
Kathy Enberg
Jenna Creaser
Brian Terleski
Marie High
Sarah Watson
Dawn Burtram
Jay Bass
Kathy Ivanca
Rebecca Blaesing
Dennis Byer
Cardinal Health
Mayo Clinic
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
Cardinal Health
GHX
GHX
GHX
GHX
GHX
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic
Fairmont Medical Center
Lake City Medical Center
Red Cedar Medical
Austin Medical Center
Novation
Novation
Novation/VHA
VHA
VHA
VHA
Novation
Sponsor
Director Accounting and Supply Chain Informatics
Project Lead
eBusiness Lead
Functional Lead
Implementation Analyst
Implementation Analyst
EDI Mapping
Account Management
Director, Business Operations, Exchange Services
Project Lead
Functional Lead
Implementation Lead
Implementation Analyst
Supply Chain Supervisor Master Data Management
Materials Management Director
Implementation Analyst
Operations Analyst Informatics
Director of Materials
Supply Chain Informatics Manager
Project Lead
Implementation Analyst
EDI Mapping
EDI Mapping
EDI Mapping
EDI Mapping
EDI Mapping
Project Lead
Project Lead
Project Lead
Project Lead
Project Manager
Project Coordinator
GLN Consultant
Director of Membership
Director Supply Chain Services
Senior Director, Networks
Senior Director SCDM & Industry Standards
24
APPENDIX E: ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING PRESENTATION
25
26
27
APPENDIX F: MAYO CLINIC 850 PURCHASE ORDER MAP
28
APPENDIX G: MAYO CLINIC 850 EDI USING THE ‘UL’ IDENTIFIER
L1
L2
L3
L4
L5
L6
L7
L8
L9
L10
L11
L12
L13
L14
L15
L16
L17
L18
L19
L20
L21
L22
L23
L24
L25
ST^850^0002|
BEG^00^SA^46061590^^20091012|
REF^ZY^ 61590|
PER^BD^Jane Doe|
TAX^26251^^^^^^^^^^^1|
DTM^010^20091012^13115526|
N9^YD^409413|
MSG^Confirmation of this order MUST BE ACKNO|
N9^YD^409413|
MSG^Please send confirmation of pricing, shi|
N9^YD^409413|
MSG^discrepancies to|
N9^YD^409413|
MSG^Email orderconfirmations mayo.edu|
N9^YD^409413|
MSG^Fax 507-555-5555|
N1^ST^MAYO CLINIC^UL^1100005705548|
PO1^1^10^EA^xx.xx^^VC^SBA26BSLUB^IN^102529^^^^^CR^JAFVLC00018|
PID^F^^^^PK CS TRAY BIOPSYMCF|
N1^MA^RADUS RAD-ULTRASOUND|
PO1^2^1^PK^x.xx^^VC^V704-B^IN^103833^^^^^CR^JANVLC00058|
PID^F^^^^TOWEL OPERATING ROOM COTTON ST BL 17X27IN 4 PER PK|
N1^MA^RADUS RAD-ULTRASOUND|
CTT^2^11|
SE^25^0002|
This is a sample 850 EDI transaction using the ‘UL’ nomenclature. Please observe line 17.
The ‘UL’ is denoted with the GLN to the right of it.
NOTE: This is a sample EDI 850 transaction is to be used for educational purposes only.
29
APPENDIX H: MAYO CLINIC CONFIGURATION OF MEDITECH FOR
CARDINAL HEALTH
Meditech contains a dictionary with a mapping for each segment. As vendors come on, the
sites mapped them for the N103ST and N104ST values and then either mapped individual
values for the vendors that are not ready or left them to a default value.
The below example shows the UL mapping for the N103ST and N104ST values from Lake City.
In the left column is the vendor number for Cardinal Health (L000126) and the right column
indicates the value to use for this vendor. If a specific value is not defined, then all other
vendors would use the value of 91 as indicated in the bottom of the screen.
Note in the N104ST for Cardinal Health Vendor number L000126 there is also a L00126WAB
that indicates a ship to of Wabasha and the appropriate GLN is in the value column for the
different Ship-to's.
30
APPENDIX I: MAYO CLINIC ANNOUNCEMENT TO SUPPLIERS
Date:
December 15, 2008
To:
Supplier Account Manager/Representatives
Re:
Data Synchronization Requirements Update
Data synchronization between our Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) and business partner
systems is a business requirement that we have been working diligently to achieve. This
objective is aligned formerly with the Health Care Supply Chain Standards Coalition (HSCSC)
and currently GS1 Healthcare US as well as industry in general. Standards are critical to an
effective and efficient supply chain for our community. Mayo Clinic has utilized a standard
price agreement template to collect product information for system updates. We currently
require the following standard elements:



GLN – Global Location Number
GTIN - Global Trade Item Number
UNSPSC – United Nations Products and Services Code
Moving forward we have also established two related and significant initiatives:


Sunrise 2010 – Elimination of the Custom Account Number
Sunrise 2012 – Elimination of the Custom Product Number
Much like our eCommerce initiatives of the past we ask that you make arrangements with us to
migrate to these standards to ensure there are no future disruptions in our transactions.
Please contact our Supply Chain Management office 507-266-1366, if you have any questions.
Jim Francis, Supply Chain Management Chair
Mark Dozier, Sourcing and Contracting Director
Joe Dudas, Informatics Director
31
APPENDIX J: RESOURCE LINKS
(1) Minnesota Pilot Phase 1 - GLN Registry for Healthcare® Recommendations for Providers,
Manufacturers and Distributors Based on Lessons learned from the Minnesota Pilot:
http://healthcareportal.gs1us.org/DocumentLibrary/tabid/70/DMXModule/419/Com
mand/Core_Download/Default.aspx?EntryId=30
(2) Minnesota Pilot Phase 2 - Process Map for Healthcare Using Global Location Numbers (GLNs)
and the GLN Registry for Healthcare:
http://www.gs1us.org/dnn_gs1us/GS1HealthcareUS/HealthcareDocumentLibrary/tab
id/166/DMXModule/586/Command/Core_Download/Default.aspx?EntryId=163
(3) GLN Healthcare Provider Tool Kit: www.gs1us.org/hcptoolkit
(4) GLN Healthcare Supplier Tool Kit: www.gs1us.org/hcsuptoolkit
(5) 2010 GLN Sunrise Resources:
www.healthcareportal.gs1us.org/AreyouReadyfor2010GLNSunrise/tabid/72/Default.a
spx
(6) GS1 Healthcare US website: www.gs1us.org/healthcare
(7) Moving to Global Location Numbers (GLNs): Considerations for Healthcare Trading Partners:
www.ghx.com/65boutGHX/IndustryStandards/tabid/827/language/en-US/Default.aspx
32